National Assembly (Republic of China)

The National Assembly of the Republic of China (Chinese: 國民大會; pinyin: Guómín Dàhuì; Wade–Giles: kuo² min² ta⁴ hui⁴; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kok-bîn Tāi-hōe; Zhuyin Fuhao: ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄉㄚˋ ㄏㄨㄟˋ) was a group of related parliamentary government organizations of the Republic of China, both in Mainland China and Taiwan.

National Assembly

國民大會

Guómín Dàhuì (Mandarin)
Kok-bîn Tāi-hōe (Taiwanese)
Koet-mìn Thai-fi (Hakka)
Type
Type
History
FoundedApril 8, 1913 (1913-04-08) (Provisional government)
March 29, 1948 (1948-03-29) (under the current constitution)
DisbandedJune 7, 2005 (2005-06-07)
Preceded byNationalist government
Succeeded by
Structure
Seats2961 (1st in 1948)
668 (1st in 1990)
325 (2nd, 1992–1996)
334 (3rd, 1996–2000)
300 (ad hoc, 2005)
Length of term
6 years (1948–1996)
4 years (1996–2000)
1 month (2005)
Elections
First general election
November 21, 1947 (1947-11-21)
Last general election
May 14, 2005 (2005-05-14)
Meeting place
National Assembly Building, Peking (1913–1925)
National Great Hall, Nanking (1948)
Zhongshan Hall, Taipei (1954–1966)
Chung-Shan Building, Taipei (1966–2005)
Website
www.na.gov.tw
Constitution
Constitution of the Republic of China (as amended))

The National Assembly was founded in 1913, following the overthrow of the previous Qing dynasty, as the first free democratic legislature in Chinese history. It was disbanded less than a year later as President Yuan Shikai assumed dictatorial power and declared himself the Emperor of China. During the Warlord Era, the National Assembly was resurrected and disbanded more than once as different warlords vied for power and legitimacy.

The last continuous National Assembly was established under the framework of the 1947 Constitution of the Republic of China as a constitutional convention and electoral college to elect the President and Vice President. The first National Assembly was elected in November 1947 and met in Nanking in March 1948. However, in the next year, the Kuomintang-led government of the Republic of China lost mainland China in the Chinese Civil War and retreated to Taiwan. The National Assembly resumed its meeting in Taipei in 1954. In the 1990s, its parliamentary powers were gradually transferred to the Legislative Yuan and direct democracy excised by the Taiwanese people before constitutional amendments made it a dormant body in 2000 and fully defunct in 2005.

History

Early Republican period

The National Assembly Building in Beijing, where the Republic of China's first elected legislature convened in 1913.
The reopening of the National Assembly on August 1, 1916 following the National Protection War, which overthrew Yuan Shikai's empire.

Calls for a National Assembly were part of the platform of the revolutionaries who ultimately overthrew the Qing dynasty. In response, the Qing dynasty formed the first assembly in 1910, but it was virtually powerless and intended only as an advisory body.

After the Xinhai Revolution, national elections yielded the bicameral 1913 National Assembly, but significantly less than one percent voted due to gender, property, tax, residential, and literacy requirements. It was not a single nationwide election but a series of local elections that began in December 1912 with most concluding in January 1913. The poll was indirect, as voters chose electors who picked the delegates, in some cases leading to instances of bribery. The Senate was elected by the provincial assemblies. The president had to pick the 64 members representing Tibet, Outer Mongolia, and Overseas Chinese for practical reasons. However, these elections had the participation of over 300 civic groups and were the most competitive nationwide elections in Chinese history.

The election results gave a clear plurality for the Kuomintang, which won 392 of the 870 seats, but there was confusion as many candidates were members in several parties concurrently. Several switched parties after the election, giving the Kuomintang 438 seats. By order of seats, the Republican, Unity, and Democratic (formerly Constitutionalist) parties later merged into the Progressive Party under Liang Qichao.

Kuomintang leader Song Jiaoren was expected to become premier, but he was assassinated on March 20. An investigation linked the crime to Premier Zhao Bingjun and possibly the provisional president, Yuan Shikai. The assembly convened for the first time on April 8 amid heated debate over the assassination. The Kuomintang was divided over solutions on how to deal with Yuan. Sun Yat-sen led a faction to rebel against Yuan on July 12 but was completely defeated within two months. The National Assembly members were compromised by threats and bribes from Yuan. He confined them and forced them to elect him formal president. Next, he outlawed the Kuomintang and expelled them from the assembly. Without a quorum, it could not convene, so Yuan disbanded it on 10 January 1914.

After Yuan died, the National Assembly reconvened on 1 August 1916 under the pretext that its three-year term had been suspended and had not expired, but President Li Yuanhong was forced to disband it due to the Manchu Restoration on 1 June 1917. 130 members (mostly Kuomintang) moved to Guangzhou where they held an "extraordinary session" on 25 August under a rival government led by Sun Yat-sen, and another 120 quickly followed. After the Old Guangxi clique became disruptive, the assembly temporarily moved to Kunming and later Chongqing under Tang Jiyao's protection until Guangzhou was liberated. Lacking a quorum, they selected new members in 1919.

In the Beiyang government, Premier Duan Qirui initiated elections for a new assembly. Seventeen provinces responded, five southern provinces boycotted, and the delegates for Tibet, Xinjiang, and Qinghai were chosen by Beijing. Votes were bought and sold in an open market with prices fluctuating constantly, and fraud and abuse was widespread. Duan dominated this assembly with his Anhui clique's political wing, the Anfu Club, which won 342 of the 470 seats, with the rest going to Liang Shiyi's Communications Clique, Liang Qichao's Research Clique or to independents. It met on 12 August 1918 to elect Xu Shichang to the presidency. This assembly met until 30 August 1920 when the Anhui clique was defeated by the Zhili clique in the Zhili–Anhui War. Xu held national elections in 1921 but only eleven provinces responded so that assembly never convened.

In 1922, Li Yuanhong was brought back to the Beijing presidency, and he recalled the 1913 assembly without the 1919 "extraordinary" additions, under the same pretext that its three years are not finished. Because Sun's Guangzhou regime was in disarray due to Chen Jiongming's rebellion, most members returned to Beijing for its August 1 session. The assembly was thoroughly discredited when it elected Cao Kun president after being bribed in 1923. To cover its shame, the assembly hastily finished the constitution it was working on for a decade. It was finally dissolved after Feng Yuxiang's coup on 24 November 1924. This assembly's three-year term was spread out over eleven years and was marked by corruption, factionalism, absences, and endless debate.

1947 Constitution

Paifang outside the National Assembly Building in Nanking in 1947.

In 1946, the Constituent Assembly promulgated a new constitution and the first National Assembly met in 1948 in Nanjing, the Chinese capital. Shortly afterwards in 1949, the Mainland fell to the Communists in the Chinese Civil War, and the National Assembly (along with the entire ROC government) was transplanted to Taipei. Apart from the KMT, the only legal parties were the Democratic Socialist Party and the Youth Party.

Under the constitution, the main duty of the National Assembly was to elect the President and Vice President for terms of six years. It also had the right to recall the President and Vice President if they failed to fulfill their political responsibilities. According to "National Assembly Duties Act," the National Assembly could amend the constitution with a two-thirds majority, with at least three-quarters membership present. It could also change territorial boundaries. After the KMT moved to Taiwan, the Assembly's right to legislate was put into moratorium until at least half of all counties in the nation were again able to elect representatives via their County Representatives' Assemblies. The responsibilities of the deputies of the Assembly, as well as of the Assembly as a whole, were derived from the directions of Dr. Sun Yat-sen.

The first National Assembly was to have been elected for a period of only six years. However, according to the Kuomintang (KMT) leadership, the fall of the Mainland made it impossible to hold new elections there, as all Mainland provinces were undergoing "Communist rebellion". As a result, the Judicial Yuan decided that the original members of the National Assembly of Communist controlled constituencies must continue to hold office until elections could be held. National Assembly elections were still held to replace delegates of territories under ROC control.

Constitutional reforms in the 1990s

The Secretariat of National Assembly in Taipei.

As a result of this decision, the same National Assembly, elected in 1947, remained for 43 years until 1991, when as part of a constitutional ruling a Second National Assembly was elected. There was strong objection to the Assembly, which was derisively called the "ten-thousand-year Congress" (萬年國會) by critics.

Shortly after passing constitutional reforms in 1991, the National Assembly held direct elections in December. Following a 1994 constitutional amendment, the Assembly essentially became a permanent constituent assembly, as the Assembly's other major role, to elect the President and Vice President of the Republic of China, was abolished. Direct elections for the president, vice president, and Assembly were held simultaneously in March 1996. Most of its other former functions, such as hearing the president's State of the Nation Address and approving the president's nominations of the grand justices and the heads of the Examination and Control Yuans, are now the functions of the Legislative Yuan.

In 1999, the Assembly passed constitutional amendments to extend terms of the Assembly and Legislative Yuan, which were strongly criticized by the public. The People First Party was founded shortly after the 2000 presidential election. The two larger parties, the Kuomintang and Democratic Progressive Party, wished to bar the People First Party (PFP) from the National Assembly. As a result, the 2000 National Assembly elections were canceled, and delegates were to be selected ad hoc on the basis of proportional representation via special election within six months of the Legislative Yuan proposing constitutional amendments, calling for the impeachment of the president or vice president, or declaring a vote on changes to national borders. However, no such situation arose from 2000 to 2004, and the National Assembly never met during this period.

Suspension

On 23 August 2004, the Legislative Yuan proposed a series of amendments that included suspending the National Assembly. The purpose of this proposal is to transfer power to ratify constitutional amendments and territorial amendments from the National Assembly to the People. Under the amendments, further proposed amendments are to be approved by three-fourths of the present members in the Legislative Yuan, with at least three-fourths of all members present. It would then be promulgated for a period of 180 days and then submitted to a referendum, in which a simple majority of all eligible voters shall be sufficient to ratify the amendments. A Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) proposal authorizing citizens initiative rights to propose constitutional amendments was withdrawn after it became clear that such a proposal would not pass the Legislative Yuan. Opponents of such constitutional reforms argued that by eliminating the 3/4 legislative vote requirement, a relatively small number of voters could force a referendum on Taiwan independence which would trigger a crisis with the People's Republic of China. By contrast, keeping the 3/4 legislative vote requirement would mean that any constitutional amendment would require a consensus among both the pan-green coalition and pan-blue coalition to be considered. The requirement that a majority of all voters approve the amendment allows for a party to block an amendment by boycotting the vote as was done with the referendums voted on the March 2004 ROC Presidential elections.

Under the Constitution at the time, the National Assembly must then be elected to consider these amendments. Such consideration and eventual ratification of the constitutional amendments was originally considered to be a formality, but a number of unexpected complications occurred in 2005. The first was the poor showing of the People First Party (PFP) in the 2004 Legislative Yuan election. The PFP was widely expected to merge with the KMT, but PFP Chairman James Soong became disenchanted by the idea. The second was the reluctance of the Taiwan Solidarity Union to pass the amendments. These amendments were seen by some Taiwan independence supporters as a prelude to a later declaration of independence, but the results of the 2004 election made this very unlikely. Faced with this outcome, the TSU became very reluctant to support a reform that would make elections by small parties, such as itself harder.

One final unexpected outcome occurred which gave the National Assembly elections on 14 May 2005 more significance than had been intended. The National Assembly election was lined up immediately after trips to mainland China by KMT Chairman Lien Chan and PFP Chairman James Soong. This had the effect of turning the May 14 elections into an opinion poll on relations with mainland China which was undesired by the Democratic Progressive Party, though the DPP subsequently gained a plurality in the elections.

2005 Taiwan National Assembly election result
Government (249)Opposition (51)
Endorse the constitutional amendmentOppose the constitutional amendment

On 7 June 2005, the 300 delegates voted (by a majority of 249 to 48) the constitutional amendments into effect, and so suspending the National Assembly until the "unification of the country" as stated in the preamble.

National Assembly sessions

TermSessionDateImportant decisionsMeeting Place
1st 1st1948Mar 29 – May 1 Ratified the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion
1st presidential election (Chiang Kai-shek, Li Tsung-jen)
National
Great Hall
Nanking
2nd1954Feb 19 – Mar 25 Amended the Temporary Provisions, removed its expiration date
Impeached Vice President Li Tsung-jen
2nd presidential election (Chiang Kai-shek, Chen Cheng)
Chung-Shan
Hall
Taipei
3rd1960Feb 20 – Mar 25 Amended the Temporary Provisions, removed two-term limit of the President
3rd presidential election (Chiang Kai-shek, Chen Cheng)
interim1966Feb 1 – Feb 8 Amended the Temporary Provisions, extended its power to create or review laws
4th1966Feb 19 – Mar 25 Amended the Temporary Provisions to perform limited legislative elections in Taiwan
4th presidential election (Chiang Kai-shek, Yen Chia-kan)
5th1972Feb 20 – Mar 25 Amended the Temporary Provisions, authorized President to reorganize central government
5th presidential election (Chiang Kai-shek, Yen Chia-kan)
Chung-Shan
Building
6th1978Feb 19 – Mar 25 6th presidential election (Chiang Ching-kuo, Hsieh Tung-min)
7th1984Feb 20 – Mar 25 7th presidential election (Chiang Ching-kuo, Lee Teng-hui)
8th1990Feb 19 – Mar 30 8th presidential election (Lee Teng-hui, Lee Yuan-tsu)
2nd interim1991Apr 8 – Apr 24 Repealed the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion
Ratified the Additional Articles of the Constitution (1st amendment)
2nd interim1992Mar 20 – May 30 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (2nd amendment)
Renounced its right to elect the President
2nd interim1992Dec 25 – Jan 30
3rd interim1993Apr 9 – Apr 30
4th interim1994May 2 – Sep 2 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (3rd amendment)
Confirmed the President shall be directly elected by Taiwanese people since 1996 (9th)
5th1995Jul 11 – Aug 17
3rd 1st1996Jul 7 – Aug 30
2nd1997May 5 – Jul 23 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (4th amendment)
3rd1998Jul 21 – Aug 10
Dec 7 – Jan 25
4th1999Jun 8 – Sep 3 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (5th amendment)
(this amendment was then voided by the Judicial Yuan order)
5th2000Apr 8 – May 19 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (6th amendment)
Changed itself to an ad hoc constitutional convention
ad hoc1st2005May 30 – Jun 7 Amended the Additional Articles of the Constitution (7th amendment)
National Assembly suspended, and functions transferred to Legislative Yuan and national referendums.

Leaders of the National Assembly

Secretary-general of the National Assembly (1947–2005)

When the Assembly is not in session, the secretary-general (Chinese: 秘書長; pinyin: Mìshūzhǎng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Pì-su-tiúⁿ) is the de facto highest-ranking official, in charge of the overall affairs of the Assembly and supervising its staff.

No.NameTerm of OfficeTermPolitical PartyPresident
1 Hung Lan-yu洪蘭友 22 November 1947 as acting
6 April 1948
28 September 19581st Kuomintang Chiang Kai-shek
2 Ku Cheng-kang谷正綱 15 December 1959 as acting
29 February 1960
16 June 1966
3 Kuo Cheng郭澄 16 June 1966 as acting
28 February 1972
10 June 1972
Chen Chien-chung陳建中 10 June 197220 September 1976 Chiang Kai-shek
Yen Chia-kan
4 Kuo Cheng郭澄 20 September 1976 as acting
24 February 1978
29 September 1980 Yen Chia-kan
Chiang Ching-kuo
5 Ho Yi-wu何宜武 October 1980 as acting
25 February 1984
September 1990 Chiang Ching-kuo
Lee Teng-hui
6 Chu Shih-lieh朱士烈 September 1990 as acting
11 April 1991
January 1992 Lee Teng-hui
7 Chen Chin-jang陳金讓 31 January 1992 as acting
26 March 1992
September 19962nd Kuomintang Lee Teng-hui
8 Chen Chuan陳川 September 1996 as acting
May 1997
19 May 20033rd Kuomintang Lee Teng-hui
Chen Shui-bian
Chien Lin Hui-chun錢林慧君 26 May 200531 May 2005ad hoc Taiwan Solidarity Union Chen Shui-bian
9 Yeh Jiunn-rong葉俊榮 31 May 20057 June 2005 Democratic Progressive Party

Presidium of the National Assembly (1948–1996)

The 1st and 2nd National Assemblies elected a presidium (Chinese: 主席團; pinyin: Zhǔxítuán; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chú-se̍k-thoân) as the leader of the body.

Speaker of the National Assembly (1996–2000)

The 3rd National Assembly elected a speaker (Chinese: 議長; pinyin: Yìzhǎng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gī-tiúⁿ) and a deputy speaker (Chinese: 副議長; pinyin: Fùyìzhǎng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Hù-gī-tiúⁿ) to lead the assembly.

No.PortraitName
(Birth–Death)
Took OfficeLeft OfficePolitical Party
Speaker 1 Fredrick Chien
錢復
(1935–)
8 July 199613 January 1999 Kuomintang
2 Su Nan-cheng
蘇南成
(1936–2014)
(resigned)
13 January 19998 September 1999 Kuomintang
Chen Chin-jang
陳金讓
(1935–)
(acting)
8 September 199919 May 2000 Kuomintang
Deputy
Speaker
1 Hsieh Lung-sheng
謝隆盛
(1941–2006)
8 July 199613 January 1999 Kuomintang
2 Chen Chin-jang
陳金讓
(1935–)
13 January 199919 May 2000 Kuomintang
  • Speaker Su Nan-cheng resigned for forwarding a term-extension amendment in the National Assembly, which was judged unconstitutional by the Judicial Yuan.

Presidium of the National Assembly (2005)

The 2005 ad hoc National Assembly reverted to electing a presidium (Chinese: 主席團; pinyin: Zhǔxítuán; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chú-se̍k-thoân) as the leader of the body. The 11 members are as follows:

Presidium of the 2005 ad hoc National Assembly[1]
OrderNamePolitical Party
1Yeh Chu-lan葉菊蘭Democratic Progressive Party
2Chen Chin-jang陳金讓Kuomintang
3Annie Lee李安妮Taiwan Solidarity Union
4Yeh Yao-peng葉耀鵬People First Party
5Chou Ching-yu周清玉Democratic Progressive Party
6Tsai Cheng-wen蔡政文Kuomintang
7Lee Yuan-chen李元貞Democratic Progressive Party
8Nancy Chao趙麗雲Kuomintang
9Hsu Chih-hsiung許志雄Democratic Progressive Party
10Ger Yeong-kuang葛永光Kuomintang
11Wellington Koo顧立雄Democratic Progressive Party

See also

References

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